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state of the union, hitting reset on his reelection campaign, and taking his message on the road to voters in battle around states. >> plus as the president touts his record, the new february jobs report beating expectations, we break down the numbers and what they mean for you. we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central >> this hour, president biden will arrive in the critical 2024 battleground of pennsylvania. this is part of a new campaign, push to amplify the message we first heard in a confrontational and somewhat unconventional state of the union address last night at times, it sounded more like a stump speech. to be fair, he was contending with some heckling republicans no surprise, things were politically charged because of that looming election rematch
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with former president donald trump let's get you out to the campaign trail with cnn senior white house correspondent, mj lee, who's in pennsylvania for us. mj. what do we know about this new push by biden and his campaign? >> well, boris, as is typical after the state of the union address, president biden is hitting the road and his first campaign stop after his remarks last night is here in the suburbs of philadelphia. and then after that, it's going to be pretty much back-to-back travel. we see him traveling to atlanta, georgia tomorrow on monday. it's new hampshire and then next week, wednesday and thursday, he is traveling to wisconsin and michigan. of course, among two of the most important and critical battleground states. and the campaign is saying that between the president and vice president kamala harris, the plan is for the two of them to basically traveled to every single day battleground state in the coming weeks. and that's not including, of course, other travel by cabinet members and campaign
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surrogates, as well. and what we're also seeing is the campaign bulking up their physical presence and also just their personnel as well. the campaign told reporters this morning that they plan to opened up just in the month of march, 100 new offices and make some 350 new hires for the campaign. and that there's going to be a really strong focus on training up volunteers as we officially really head into the general election season. now, all of this, of course, is width i towards amplifying the message and the vision that we heard president biden last night trying to paint this is going to be largely about a the strength of the economy that was one of the major themes. of course, that we heard the president talking about last night as this is such an important issue for so many voters across the country. here's a reminder of how the president try to sell that
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economic message in his state of the union remarks last night mark came to office determined to get us through one of the toughest periods in the nation's history. >> we have. it doesn't make new, but news in a cities and towns, the american people were writing the greatest comeback story, never told now in addition to all of the travel that we just >> talked about, the campaign says that it is also launching a new ad campaign. this is to the tune of were told $30 million over the course of some six weeks, both digital ads and tv ads. and these ads, as you might expect expect, are going to be largely focused on some of the policies that again, we heard the president talking about last night and drawing that contrast between president biden and former president donald trump. of course, that was such a major theme that we saw woven in throughout the course of his remarks last
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night, boris mj lee, live for us in wallingford pennsylvania. thanks so much. mj brianna, when president biden is out on the campaign trail here in a few hours, he'll be able to tout another stronger-than-expe cted jobs report. the labor department saying us companies created 200 new jobs last month. healthy sign for the economy cnn's vanessa yurkevich joining us now to break down the report and vanessa, when it comes to wage grew growth, some interesting numbers here >> yeah, we have to take it all together. so we have a really strong jobs number 275,000 jobs added in february. that is hot, but not too hot. and this also pushed up the unemployment rate to 3.9%. >> but that is >> because you had more people who were unemployed looking for jobs. but we've still seen a sub 4% unemployment rate for many, many months now, a streak really that we haven't been seen in decades. also, the
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sectors that have added jobs in february are the sectors that have been adding jobs for the past year or so now, you have health care, 67,000 jobs added. government 52,000 jobs added and food and drinking establishments adding 42,000 jobs. but as you mentioned, brianna, it's always important to dig a little bit deeper in this report and look at wages. wages on an annual basis in february, cool to about 4.3%. and if you're an american, you're saying, well, wait a minute, i don't want my wages to go down, but here's the flip side. when wages outpace inflation by a lot, that is actually bad for inflation. the more money we have to spend the. more that pushes up prices. so that is what the federal reserve ultimately wants to see. they want to see inflation, they want to see wages cooling and inflation cooling. but they want to see that wage rate close to 3.5%. remember, we're sitting at an inflation rate of about 3%. they want to just a little bit
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higher to make sure americans can still come for all the bills, but not be too hot. so they spend an inflation goes up again, brianna, and the government is also revising the blockbuster jobs report from last month, which now shows many fewer jobs were actually added in january. tell us about that yeah, when we got those numbers in january or eyes popped out of our sockets because 353,000 jobs added in >> january, that was hot, that was very hot, but the revision that we just got in this jobs report signals that we actually only added 229,000 it's in jobs in january, less than what we just got in this report for february. so that is still robust job growth, but not as strong as we initially expected. we also got revisions downward in december as well. so we're actually seeing a really good place with the jobs market right now. where it's not too hot, not too cold, as they say, the goldilocks just
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write >> just right. vanessa yurkivich, you are just right. thank you so much. let's discuss now with cnn economics and political commentator catherine rampell and cnn senior political analyst, ron brownstein. all right, catherine? yes. 25 consecutive months with the jobless rate below 4%, its longest stretch in more than 50 years, yes, wages are outpacing inflation. president's would kill for those numbers, right? so how do you explain the disconnect on the ground as we see some of the purchasing power of individuals being pretty challenging. >> it has been a puzzle for a really long time about why the us looks so good on paper. and yet consumers have been relatively grouchy about it for awhile. i mean, it's consumer sentiment has been as low recently as it was in the deepest, darkest steps of the great recession right? when we were coming out of the financial crisis and unemployment was around 9% i
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will say that in recent months, consumer sentiment, consumer confidence, other views of economic optimism those have been improving. there's still not great, but consumers are getting a little bit rosier in their outlook. look, even if it is not actually in objectively a rosy outlook. outlook, so to speak >> ron, that grouchy enos, that katherine referred to. i mean, that's a real potential liability for the white house and republicans are trying to describe president biden as out of touch on the economy that was a large part of katie britt, the senator from alabama's message last night. how much do you think republicans have a chance to connect with voters using that message >> i think it is a real risk for biden and maybe the most calculated risk we saw in the state of union. i don't think it's that complicated to understand why voters remain mostly negative on the economy. those catherine pointed out the
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consumer confidence numbers have increased substantially in the last few months prices are further necessities of life are still significantly higher than when joe biden took office. eventually, we kind of adjust to those higher prices, but that is not the reality we are living in right now for many voters you know, what pollsters will tell me what they hear in focus groups? is it they say they had more money in their pocket at the end of the week under donald trump then under joe biden. and that's pretty much it. i mean, there isn't, you know, whatever the stock market is or the unemployment rate is, doesn't really outweigh that. now, the reason why this is a calculated risk for biden is that there are a lot of democrats who have felt that he needed to acknowledge the strains that voters are feeling in their daily lives. making ends meet. he went to the opposite pole and that state of the union last night, our economy is the envy of the world the great american comeback. and you know, that line of argument does leave them open to this republican claim that he is out of touch with what people are actually feeling healing. and there are a fair amount of democrats who
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are worried that he is really pushing the dial too much in the direction of accentuating the positive >> so catholics might all the good news. yeah, >> i'm sure they accentuate the response from the white house that we got from president biden last night or i guess what you could say as a pre rebuttal, not sure how to describe it exactly, but essentially what we got from the white house was some kind yes, a bundle of some kind. was economic populism. the idea that corporations are to blame for some of those high prices that ron alluded to, that the corporate tax rate should be higher how does that message carrier? with voters when you have republicans arguing that higher taxes for corporations means ultimately higher prices for consumers well it's an excellent question. i think a lot of the stuff in biden's economic messaging is a little bit silly. the ante bill that he endorsed for example,
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shrinkflation is maybe more salient today, but it's actually not more common today than it was a few years ago. things like that. these are sort of populist talking points that he is hoping will demonstrate to the american public that the biden administration is fighting for their pocketbooks. that said, i think where actually biden and democrats have a lot more material to work with is by talking about the trump economic agenda, because trump, as much as people remember his economy as been much better. and in many respects, it was whether due to him or not trump would implement a lot of policy proposals that would make inflation worse, right? he wants to have global tariffs of 10%. those tariffs we know you have been passed along to consumers in the past. the same thing, what happened under a trump administration, that means higher prices for regular people. beyond that, he wants to shut down immigration, not just illegal immigration by the
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way, legal immigration to if you look at his actual policy agenda, he would, for example dismantle the visa program that allows seasonal agricultural workers to come to the united states. what do you think that will do to produce prices? so if biden really wants to make a strong argument about why he is better for the economy beyond talking about these sort of silly, frivolous policies that maybe won't do very much but sound nice that he is proposing. he could draw attention to the things that would be actually damaging to the metrics, inflation paycheck, growth, et cetera, that american save that they care about >> ron, i >> wonder what you heard in the state of the union address that was tailored economically for young people because this is a group that biden really does have to bring back into the fold. they helped him win the last election. he's having some issues with them. they're not happy with him, especially over the israel gaza war. and
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they're feeling the pinch. i mean, when you look at people just getting we started sort of building their families, childcare is up significantly for toddlers and infants they can't buy homes because they're feeling priced out of that market and yet rents are high as well. did you hear something that audience might have said? yeah, he's, he's working for me on this well, a great question. and i think it really goes to the heart of how the economic debate is going to unfold. is it going to be based on policy or experience? i mean, i think biden did frank begin to frame what has been a traditional democratic argument that has had success in the past i will raise taxes on the richest of the rich and corporations and use them to fund initiatives that will help you afford your life better. children's tax credit, universal pre-k child care subsidies help in caring for seniors while trump and
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medicare is going to negotiate lower prescription drug prices while trump is going to protect the rich and that's an argument democrats have. they can roll out a bad and make that argument at two in the morning. they've been doing it for generations. the problem is that at the moment, vastly more people think that trump's pile economic policies help them than think that biden's economic policies that help them and the risk, i think the challenge for damage is that even many voters who, if, even if voters agree that trump's policy, policies mostly benefit the rich they may not mind that much if they think that they were also better off under them, then they have been under biden. and so i got kinda go back to where i started crossing that threshold of saying to voters that he understands the strange that inflation has created in their lives may be the prerequisite to getting heard on what he would do going forward. he is choosing something else. he has a lot of positive trends in the economy. he's choosing to highlight them, but that is the risk i think if he takes with the road, he's going down ron
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brownstein, catherine rampell, appreciate the insight. thanks so much >> thank you >> so donald trump has paid out nearly $92 million in bond as he appeals the e jean carroll defamation case in new york will he have enough cash left to pay that 454 million judgment in the new york civil fraud case. we'll dig into the numbers and killed while trying to get help and other aid mission in gaza reportedly turning deadly. we'll have the latest on the crisis there ahead the lead with >> jake tapper today at four cnn at morgan stanley, old-school hardware meets bold new thinking partnering to unlock new ideas to create new legacies, to transform a company. industry economy generation because grit and
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>> keynesian that do >> former president donald trump making his appeal and the e jean carroll defamation case official today, by posting in nearly $92 bond, it comes as trump but also faces a march 25 deadline to put up another 400 million in the new york attorney general's civil fraud case. cnn's kara scannell is following all of the developments for us. kara, what's the latest here? >> well, brianna, with >> just a few hours before donald trump's deadline was about to hit. he did post this bond in court this morning for 91 million. so he could appeal the jury award to e. jean carroll of $83.3 million. the difference in the price there is due to interests that trump would have to put up because he's posting this ban. there had been a question of where donald trump would get the money from for the bond. and now we have learned that the bond is being secured by a
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global insurance company very well-known company called chubb. so they have secured this ban and we also can see on the bond that donald trump signed it on tuesday of this week, that was as he was still asking the judge in this case face to give him more time to post the bonds. so now that this is kind of settled, the judge has asked e. jean carroll's attorneys to weigh in and see if they object to the bond or any of the terms. and if they do, they have to tell him by monday morning, if they do, then everyone will be back in court monday afternoon. brianna. >> and when is trump's bond do in the new york civil fraud cases? and he's he expected to have the cash without kara >> i mean, that's another big question that bond is due in just about two weeks. on march 25th. now, trump had offered to post a $100 million bond, but an appeals court judge rejected that. trump has now making arguments before a panel of judges at the new york appeals court to try to get they haven't to allow him not to post the bond until his appeal of the entire judgment is completed, and we expect that
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the appeals court panel will issue their decision by the end of the month. but again, you can see these deadlines, all kind of coming together here because it will be toward the end of the month. march 25th is when he is expected to post this amount of money and will will he be able to get someone to underwrite a bond of that magnitude for an individual and people close to trump say he has the money he owns all of these properties, but he still has to be able to put it together in a package and he has said, worst comes worst-case scenario. he might have to sell some of his properties in a fire brianna well, kara scannell in new york. thank you for that. haiti is now extending its state of emergency as gangs ravage the capital city, what we're hearing from the us state department is officials tried to wrestle back control plus expelled congressman and accused fraudster george santos is running for office again, where and why he's throwing his hat back in the ring >> sunday why is china
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the game changer. try it today, go-to pretty litter.com. >> i'm isabel rosalas in montgomery, alabama. and this is cnn the chaos in haiti appears to be getting worse and the rampant gang violence, there is worsening as well. the un says that thousands of people are displaced. women are facing sexual violence and gangs now control about 80% of the capital port au-prince a state of emergency has been extended into next month. >> that's after intruders broke into a major port terminal. these new satellite images show what was left after looters ransacked shipping
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containers. today, secretary of state antony blinken spoke with haiti's prime minister, who essentially shut out of the country over the deteriorating situation they're cnn's patrick oppmann is monitoring it all from havana, cuba. patrick, what was the conversation like between the two leaders >> well, us officials are describing while with they call an intensive conversation where again, the secretary, secretary of state, antony blinken on thursday pressed aria henry, to announce the formation of a transition government with the ultimate goal of holding elections, something that henry has resisted saying that the deteriorating security situation in haiti over the last months and years simply is not permitted elections which should have already been held. but henry depends on us support. he is facing increased calls from within haiti and now with from outside haiti to form a more inclusive government to see that play kate's, these
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gangs that are simply rampaging. he gets the state are preventing him from returning to his own country. we've spoken to residents inside of haiti and the describes situation where they cannot leave their houses, they're essentially being prevented by these gangs from going and looking for more food from fleeing, from getting on a plane if they're able to. and so, for many of these people are supplies it's a running low if they have not already run out >> patrick, you mentioned some of what it's like for folks on the ground there. is there an update on whether aid is able to get in to do we know if that situation is likely to improve anytime soon? >> no. you mentioned you mentioned a state of emergency, but the police do not control the streets in haiti anymore. it's, it is the gangs and they are preventing at organizations, ngos, world food programme from bringing in badly needed aid. i talked to one diplomat. i know from her time here in who was in
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port-au-prince, and she said she's running low on and drinking waters, having a boil water. and so even people were able to stock up food ahead of time, have an emergency fund to food? no, the lucky people they are running low. these gangs have had a profitable this. tree over the years of kidnapping people and they're essentially holding an entire country hostage, insisting one that ariel henry step down as prime minister, and then they do not want an international force is thousand plus force soldiers from kenya to come and restore order because that threaten the zone. their livelihood. their many illegal businesses, including drug trafficking. so very clearly here the gangs have the upper hand and time is running out >> a tragic situation continues to unfold there. patrick oppmann live for us from havana. thanks so much it is one of the biggest mysteries in the history of aviation. the disappearance of malaysia airlines flight 370. today marks ten years since the plane vanished with hundreds of people on board coming hang up
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airstrikes. and now malnutrition and dehydration are killing them. here's a glimpse inside kamal adwan hospital in northern gaza, where several children have died of starvation tiny limbs wounds protruding the constant sound of crying from children now facing starvation in gaza. these will italy as anne's final moments his tiny fingers gripped in his mother's hand >> you're zhan al-kafarnah was just ten years old when he died on monday and a day later, unicef sounded this alarm. the babies of thousands of women who are due to give birth in the next month in the gaza strip are at risk of dying premature births are up. mother's dehydrated and traumatized, struggled to breastfeed. they can't find formula. they can't find clean water. and without relief, the threat from famine could eclipse that of airstrikes, like the one this past weekend
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in rafah that killed five month olds, waseem and niamh all belong banza twins, long awaited by their parents who finally conceived 11 years after they married, according to reuters, their mother ronya, told the news agency we were asleep. we're not shooting and we were not fighting. >> what is their fault? what is their fault? what is her fault? >> in >> october and israeli strike killed 11 year-old malloc shroff along with her ten-year-old brother, malloc and their six and three-year-old sisters, jasmine and nor, according to the washington post and 13 of their cousins also died in october. i'll jazeera reported that an airstrike on a home where gaza bureau chief, while al-dahdouh's family was sheltering after being displaced, killed his wife, his 15 year-old son, mahmoud, his seven-year-old daughter, sham, and his one and-a-half-year-old grandson, autumn the distraught journalist, carrying adams tiny body through all aqsa martyrs hospital shortly afterward
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>> it is pretty tough video to watch and it's actually even worse than this because a statement from the family said that there were 12 members of the al-dahdouh family who were killed nine of them were children >> in november brother and sister, tarik and re'im, 5.3 years old were asleep side-by-side when an airstrike killed them in southern gaza, their grandfather, khalid knob khan, told cnn, he was wishing, hoping that they were only sleeping, but they weren't sleeping. they were gone al jazeera reported that salma jaw bear was fleeing gaza city with her family and december when they came under fire and the four-year-old was shot in the neck and died the middle child in the family, salma's father described her as mischievous, an intelligent. and in january, six-year-old hin rajab was trapped in a car for days with the bodies of several family members all killed trying to escape northern gaza this
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harrowing audio of her cousin calling the palestine red crescent for help capture the moment that their car came under attack from an israeli tank could you see >> hands body was found the following month along with two ambulance workers who had gone missing trying to rescue her. there are too many victims to name. there's too many to fathom. and there are countless orphans like lana, whose stories cnn's jomana karadsheh told six-year-old lander was under the rubble, her home for three days. mommy and daddy are underneath that. she says i just want mama >> i went baba. >> i want my family lana cries according to figures from the
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gaza health ministry, more than 72,000 palestinians have been injured since the start of the war. and a large proportion of them are children. dr. mohammad subeh is an emergency room physician who came from california to help in gaza my my first several patients who are pediatric patients, one shot in the arm while he was sleeping in the tent. another two kids pulled out of the rubble. we're still waiting to locate their family. gunshot wound to the thigh in a three-month old crushed the extremities >> of course, this conflict began after october 7, as dozens of israeli children were among those brutally murdered and kidnapped by hamas 42 children, kidnapped that day to still held captive, according to reuters and the times of israel, after 40 were released in the temporary ceasefire, 116 were orphaned and 38 children were killed including the
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youngest victim of the october 7 massacre. mila cohen, barely ten months old, shot to death that kibbutz bury her father and grandmother also so murdered. and now here, this picture, five months later, another little girl named mila, breathing her last breath. mila abdul nabi in gaza. she died this past week of starvation she was three we'll be right back >> i'll just use. any couldn't get out. >> vegas was having an identity crisis i it was the beginning of the downfall, but vegas at a different idea, vegas, the
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miles of steps per hour does step count? hunter, the sport matt and wireless remote call now cnn saturday mornings starting tomorrow at eight on cnn. >> ten years ago today, 239 people aboard malaysia airlines flight 370 disappeared over the indian ocean the plane was headed to beijing from kuala lumpur, but suddenly fell off the radar. >> although pieces of >> debris have turned up, neither the plane itself nor any of the victims have ever been found. today. family members who lost loved ones protested outside the malaysian embassy in beijing they're demanding the chinese government reopen the search. and it could potentially happen malaysian authorities say they are ready to discuss a possible new attempt. cnn aviation analyst miles o'brien is here, miles let's start with the very basics ten years later, a series of investigations have taken place. what information do we have about what happened
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to mh370? >> well, boris, the shreds of information we had had been kind of hat two out of data in a way. the aircraft lost its transponder and did not communicate abruptly. shortly after taking off from kuala lumpur and it was preserved once it disappeared from radar screens to have likely fallen from beneath that point. but there was no wreckage there. it was subsequently determined. you may recall that there was a satellite device on board inmarsat satellite device, which allowed it to communicate with the home office as it were. and while it wasn't actively engaged in communication, it was saying pinging, saying, i'm here and that satellite analysis led to this stark conclusion that this aircraft took an abrupt turn floor or rather secured its route around the islands and
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then headed straight straight to the south, to the southern indian ocean >> beyond >> that, we don't know that much. we've had a lot. there's been a lot of mathematical analysis of those radio pings to try to determine where in the face of the globe that aircraft might be. but it's not a very exact science. and it's a very big ocean >> yeah, that is a good point. i'm wondering of the official accounts. the official theories of what happened which do you believe has the most that is backed up by the most amount of limited data that we have, which is the most believable claim, i guess you could say yeah, boris, there's no way i can come up with a scenario for what happened and what we know about what >> happened without some sort of deliberate action by some individual on board that aircraft it's clear that it
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was purposeful to disappear and it's clear that it was steered in that direction. so we know that there's no magical scenario that any aviation expert i've ever spoken to where you could have something that will be that sudden that apparently catastrophic and also allow for that aircraft to continue to fly. beyond ten hours of flight that those two things just don't go together unless there is some desire by an individual on that aircraft to disappear and i to me, it's an inescapable conclusion yeah. >> miles, do you hold out hope that we'll ever get an official answer, perhaps with the help of new technology or another layer of investigation that has not yet been reached. >> yeah, we've got to keep hope alive. don't wait. on behalf. just for the benefit of these families. if nothing else, but
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for the larger aviation community needs to know the answer to if the aircraft is ever found the black boxes, the cockpit voice recorder, and the flight data recorder might be able to at least eliminate some scenarios. it may not ultimately determine why an individual might have done this, but it could exclude the possibility that there was some sort of mechanical failure or other factor involved here? you know ten, years underwater at depth, that will be some test of the technology of these so-called black boxes. but if, if the searchers could ever locate the wreckage and see it understand how it might have broken apart or not, and what is in those boxes? that could finally get us to a point where we can say something more definitively >> we've seen sort of false starts when it comes to a new expansive search for the plane.
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malaysian authorities recently indicated they could be open to a new surge. what would you say is the likelihood that we see one >> i think i think one is brewing here. i think there's a lot of pressure right now to re-engage there is new technology. after all, ten years have passed here, and i got to tell you if you'd asked me ten years in a day ago whether a triple seven could go missing like this, i would have said you're crazy boris. and so here we are ten years later, triple-7 is still missing. the technology for finding things underwater has progressed dramatically in this company, which would like to do one of these no-find, no-fee searches, but still needs permission to do that. is ready to try this new fleet of autonomous underwater vehicles to attempt to find the wreckage. and there is a theory out there by an aerospace analyst and physicist, richard godfrey, which comes up with an
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interesting scenario based on disturbance patterns in ham radio signals which leads him to believe that the previous searches had been in the wrong place. obviously, they'd been in the wrong place, but they've been way off and that there is a location about 1,200 miles due west of perth, australia, where he believes this new data might lead to a findings. so if nothing else, they've got at a run that one down. i >> think so many unanswered questions and it continues to haunt the public. most of all, obviously, the families who lost loved ones because of that flight, miles o'brien width leave the conversation there. thanks so much for the time. >> you're welcome, boris. >> of course, brown. >> after being charged with misusing campaign funds, being kicked out of congress republican george santos. santos is launching a new campaign for congress, makes sense, right? and last night,
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santos took advantage of his floor privileges as a disgraced, but still former law baker to attend the state of the union address. cnn's melanie zanona is live on capitol hill for us. that was really something to behold as people learned that you can still go onto the floor even if you're in jordan for santos's situation, melt >> yeah. that's exactly right. and as you can imagine, most lawmakers are not exactly enthusiastic about george santos's surprise appearance last night that the house really thought it had turned the page on the george santos saga, but he had different plans. not only did he show up last night to the state of the union, decked out in a bit dazzled collar and and he's really flashy silver loafers, but he also announced that mid-speech that he was planning on launching a primary challenge against republican nick lalota, one of the republicans who lead the charge to expel him. so most republicans saw this as nothing more than a cry for attention. here's a little bit more of what republicans had to say >> george santos is one of the most bizarre people i have ever met i surely didn't hug him or
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they'll greet him with any sort of a niceness whatsoever. he's an embarrassment to here in congress. >> i think george santos should focus if that's really his name, that's what he should focus. he should focus more on worrying about his personal issues and trying to come back here and make another spectacle out of this. one of those country's oldest institutions. >> i look, i really hope i wish him the best, but that doesn't include food being back here >> now as far as >> his congressional bid, >> it is still very much seen as a long shot. we should also point out that george santos is going to be on trial later this year for a variety of criminal charges. so nick lalota he is not taking the threat very seriously. bri they wish him the best. now go away. and what are they doing to make that a reality male >> yeah, we'll ask a pointed out earlier, he is still allowed floor privileges because he is a former member and unless they would've stripped those privileges in the expulsion resolution, he is
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still currently allowed to come to the floor whenever he wants, but there is now talk of passing a bill that would strip expelled members of their floor, povich's something a democrat. ritchie torres is looking into and nick lalota says he's looking into it as well. >> all right. we'll see melanie zanona. thank you. still ahead on cnn news central, a new warning from the cdc, something you may have in your medicine cabinet is landing thousands of kids in the er >> what happened to the golden boy of new jersey? >> i engage in affair with another did you want to be outed united states of scandal with jake tapper? >> go there, go to therapy is if they're having an interview which i definitely do you episodes next sunday at nine on cnn xr tech allergy relief works fast and last a full 24 hours. so dave can be deliver dance? >> okay. days. >> let's be more than our allergies seize the day. witzer tech >> can the riva support your
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